Название: Cherokee Stranger
Автор: Sheri WhiteFeather
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
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Across from Harvey, at an end booth, she spotted the back of someone’s head, a man in a black cowboy hat. A newspaper was spread in front of him, taking up most of the table.
Emily turned the revolving wheel at the cook’s counter, checking out the orders she’d inherited, including Harvey’s cherry Danish and never-ending boost of coffee.
When she refilled his cup, he looked up and smiled. He was a bony little man, with narrow shoulders and baggy trousers. He wore striped suspenders every day, but she suspected he needed them to hold up his pants.
“How are you, missy?” he asked.
“Fine.” Harvey, of course, knew about her cancer. He made a point of knowing everyone’s business, of gossiping like a blue-haired matron.
Keeping his voice low, he cocked his head toward the man in the black hat. “I’ll bet he’s Lily Mae’s new assistant.”
“You think so?” Harvey loved to talk about Lily Mae Prescott, the scatterbrained proprietor of Tandy Stables.
He nudged her arm. “Why don’t you go find out?”
“I suppose I should say hello. Let him know his order is almost ready.” She turned, coffeepot in hand, and approached the black hat.
The man shifted, rattled the paper and looked up.
Emily nearly dropped the glass carafe. “James?”
There he was, as rough and rugged as the timeworn Stetson shielding his eyes, as dark and forbidden as her dreams, as the ache of not making love with him.
She feared she might faint.
“Emily?” Equally stunned, he stared at her.
She moved forward, battling for composure, pretending to do her job. “Do you want more coffee?”
“No. Yes. I guess so.”
He made no sense, but she understood his confusion. They’d never expected to see each other again.
She poured the hot brew, filling his cup, telling herself she would survive this incredibly awkward moment, the pounding of her heart, the ringing in her ears.
His jaw, she noticed, was clean shaven, scraped free of the dark stubble. But somehow, he still managed to look like a desperado, an Indian renegade.
“I thought you were going home,” she said, her voice as unsteady as her pulse.
“I am home. I just moved here.”
Oh, God. Dear God.
“That’s why I was in Lewiston.” He cleared his throat, attempted to explain. “I flew in that night. The motel was close to the airport. It was convenient.” He lifted his cup, set it back down. “Why were you there?”
“I—” She set the coffeepot on his table. “I had an appointment that afternoon, and I didn’t feel like driving home.”
“So you got a room?”
“Yes.” He seemed like a mirage, a figment of her tortured imagination, but he was real. Heaven help her. He was real.
“I didn’t mean for this to happen, Emily.”
“It’s okay. It’s fine.” She wiped her clammy hands on her uniform, on the pink dress she routinely wore. “You’ll like this town.”
“Geez, Louise,” Harvey said from behind her. “You two young folks know each other?”
Silent, James shifted his gaze to the old-timer. Harvey moseyed on over, shuffling his way to the booth.
Emily stood like a statue. She’d tried to forget James Dalton. She’d tried so hard, so desperately to erase him from her mind, from the memory imbedded in her soul.
Without waiting for an invitation, Harvey sat across from James. “Are you Lily Mae’s new assistant?”
“Yes. She just hired me this morning.”
“Hot diggity. I knew it.” He turned to Emily. “Didn’t I tell ya?” Then back to James. “So, how’d you meet our little Emmy? What’s this about Lewiston?”
Caught off guard, James folded the paper. Emily saw him struggle to answer, to find a suitable explanation. “I noticed her. I thought she was pretty.”
And he’d wanted to sleep with me, she thought. Until he’d discovered she’d never had sex before.
Harvey flashed his dentures. “I think she’s pretty, too. That’s why I loiter…I mean, eat here. But don’t tell the other waitresses I said that. They think I hang around for them.”
James’s mouth, that warm, firm mouth, tilted in a faint smile, and Emily recalled the lust-driven flavor of his last kiss, the very moment he’d pulled her onto the bed.
Then let her go.
After Harvey introduced himself to Silver Wolf’s newest resident, reciting his name and how long he’d lived in this county, he said, “So you’ll be working with Lily Mae. That woman’s crazy, you know.”
“Must be why she hired me.”
When James glanced her way, Emily thought about her upcoming surgery. Would he find out? Would Harvey tell him?
“I’ll check on your order,” she said to James, hoping to prod Harvey back to his stool.
But the gossip guru remained where he was, blabbing about Lily Mae Prescott.
Finally, when she brought James’s breakfast, Harvey excused himself, pleased that he’d spoken his piece about Lily Mae.
After the older man paid his bill and left the restaurant, James lifted the brim of his hat, exposing his eyes.
Those haunted eyes.
“They must have been lovers,” he said.
“What?” Emily realized she’d left the coffeepot on his table all this time. That her brain was completely addled.
“Harvey and Lily Mae.”
His words sunk in. “You think he and she—”
“A long time ago. When they were young.”
She blinked, stared at him, blinked again. “No one has ever assumed that before. Lily Mae drives Harvey nuts.”
“Because he can’t get her out of his system.” James tapped on his chest. “It happens sometimes. A woman gets inside you, and you can’t let her go. You—” He paused, as if suddenly aware of what he was saying, of what he was feeling.
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